Avian flu risk to humans ‘very low’–Dar By Jasper Emmanuel Y. Arcalas @jearcalas
& Samuel P. Medenilla
M
@sam_medenilla
ALACAÑANG said on Tuesday a “no test, no movement” policy for poultry is now in place in areas in Luzon which were hit by avian influenza (HPA1) to prevent the spread of the infectious disease. Acting Presidential spokesperson Karlo B. Nograles said authorities imposed the measure in Baliuag, Bulacan, as well as Candaba and Mexico in Pampanga, which reported cases of HPA1. “Our pou ltr y sta keholders have been duly informed, and
“‘Our poultry stakeholders have been duly informed, and the Bureau of Animal Industry has advised and tasked them to self-monitor and conduct internal surveillance on their own farms.” - Acting Presidential spokesperson Karlo B. Nograles
the Bureau of Animal Industry has advised and tasked them to self-monitor and conduct internal surveillance on their own farms,” Nograles said during an online press briefing on Tuesday.
The government and poultry industry stakeholders, meanwhile, assured the public that the risk of catching highly pathogenic avian influenza (HPAI) H5N1 virus is “very low” and poultry meat products remain “safe” to eat. “We assure the general public that the risk [of catching the] H5N1 virus is very low. Poultry meat and its products are safe to eat,” Agriculture Secretary William D. Dar said in a statement on Tuesday. Dar said the Department of Agriculture (DA), local government units (LGUs) of Pampanga and Bulacan, and the Department of Health (DOH) are coordinating to implement measures “to avoid the risk of transmission to humans”
of the virus. “We enjoin all poultry raisers and farm workers to observe and implement necessary biosecurity measures and cooperate with temporar y movement restrictions that may be applied in affected areas to prevent incursion of the disease in their facilities/ farms,” he said. The government’s AI Protection Program (AIPP) said there is “no evidence that any human cases of avian influenza have been acquired by eating poultry products.” The AIPP manual contains the government’s established protocols during bird flu outbreaks. See “Avian flu,” A2
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Wednesday, February 23, 2022 Vol. 17 No. 138
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POST-DUTERTE FISCAL PLAN IN ‘FINAL TOUCHES’ By Bernadette D. Nicolas
F
INANCE Secretary Carlos G. Dominguez III said they are now working on the “final touches” of a fiscal consolidation plan to help the next administration address the country’s debt which further ballooned amid the Covid-19 pandemic, but would not confirm or deny if such plan will include proposals for additional taxes. Speaking before members of the Financial Executives Institute of the Philippines (FINEX), Dominguez on Tuesday stressed
TRANSPORT group Pinagkaisang Samahan ng mga Tsuper at Operator Nationwide (Piston) and militant labor groups stage a protest at a gasoline station on East Avenue in Quezon City on Tuesday, February 22, 2022, calling on the government to scrap the oil deregulation law to mitigate the spiraling cost of fuel. This is the eighth consecutive week that oil firms have raised their fuel prices. And, while there are rumblings of a possible transport strike and lawmakers pitching for relief, Malacanang Palace sees little indication that Congress can pass legislation for such purpose anytime soon. See A1 top story and also “Relief from steady oil price hikes not seen to come from legislation,” on page A12.
A
By Cai U. Ordinario @caiordinario
S Russian tanks make their way into Donetsk in eastern Ukraine, oil prices teased the $100 per barrel level, raising alarm bells for net oil-importing countries like the Philippines to brace for the impact of these developments on local pump prices. See “Oil price,” A2
@BNicolasBM
that the country needs to outgrow the country’s debt “at the soonest possible time” to lower its share in relation to the country’s GDP which had already spiked to a 16-year-high of 60.5 percent in 2021. It was in 2019 when the country notched its record-low debtto-GDP ratio of 39.6 percent. “The only way to make this sustainable is by growing the economy faster and investing in the future. The fiscal deficit should be lowered to cover only infrastructure investments and not operational expenses,” See “Duterte,” A2
Japan, Sokor visitor lanes for vaxxed sought By Ma. Stella F. Arnaldo
@akosistellaBM Special to the BusinessMirror
T
HE Philippines has proposed to the governments of South Korea and Japan to set up “special visitor lanes” for fully vaccinated leisure travelers to and from these countries. This was confirmed by Tourism Secretary Bernadette Romulo Puyat in a Viber message to the BusinessMirror: “We, the Department of Tourism (DOT) and Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), are working
“We, the Department of Tourism (DOT) and Department of Foreign Affairs (DFA), are working on it. We’d like to pattern this after our arrangement with Singapore.” –Tourism Sec. Berna Romulo Puyat
on it. We’d like to pattern this after our arrangement with Singapore.” Just recent ly, Ma n i l a a nd
Singapore agreed to set up special visitor lanes for their fully vaccinated citizens traveling between both locations starting March 4. The program, knows as Vaccinated Travel Lane in Singapore, will allow fully vaccinated t ravelers to enter Singapore “quarantine-free,” according to the city state’s Safe Travel website. Visitors to Singapore must have been inoculated with Covid-19 vaccines approved by the World Health Organization. (See https://bit.ly/3t108D1). The same procedure will be applied
for arriving Singaporeans in the Philippines. Romulo Puyat will be leaving for South Korea and Japan this Friday to meet with their respective travel trade groups, in a bid to reopen tourism traffic with the Philippines. “We are meeting with the biggest media partners, tour operators, travel associations and presenting the reopening of the Philippines, and to personally invite them to the WTTC Global Summit,” she said.
PESO exchange rates n US 51.3930 n japan 0.4479 n UK 69.9048 n HK 6.5878 n CHINA 8.1123 n singapore 38.1905 n australia 36.9516 n EU 58.1358 n SAUDI arabia 13.6982
See “Vaxxed,” A2
Source: BSP (22 February 2022)